I having Geography backround and GIS / Remote Sensing professional and now i want to switch to solidwork. My question is this :That Soldwork welcomes people from other fields rather then Machanical or electrical .

As i am not getting any job in GIS and Remote Sensing . I would like to switch to solidworks. But the job eligibility criteria are not goes like as i want. It requires Degree or Diploma in Mechanicals/Electronics and i having geographic backround, so what should i do? either i go with Solidworks or not?

Vector format topographic maps with contours lines could be used in SolidWorks to generate surfaces, but this could be a very time consuming.

SolidWorks does not work directly with DTMs, triangles, polygons or point cloud data which is typically how topograhic data is formatted. There are various ways to convert these to SolidWorks surfaces, but this typically results in more time and additional software.

As i am not getting any job in GIS and Remote Sensing . I would like to switch to solidworks. But the job eligibility criteria are not goes like as i want. It requires Degree or Diploma in Mechanicals/Electronics and i having geographic backround, so what should i do? either i go with Solidworks or not?

First of all thank you for reply. YES i want job in solidwork and for that i start learning it by my own . But when i am searching jobs the eligibility criteria goes like degree/Diploma in Mechanicals or Electronics. That creating panics for me as i having Geography backround . Thats why i decided to ask experts like you . Either i should go with Solidworks or not.

If I understand your question, you want to change careers. SolidWorks is used almost exclusively in mechanical design. Anybody can learn SolidWorks in a reasonable amount of time, but it takes much longer to learn design principles. You can get a job just by knowing SolidWorks, the same as many other high-end software packages, but these are entry-level jobs. To be an engineer or designer, you will need a degree or a lot of experience.